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Kurt vonnegut jr literature style
Contribution of postmodernism in literature
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The poem “Woodchucks” by Maxine Kuman and the poem “The Fish” by Elizabeth Bishop give the reader two examples about how man interacts with nature. Charles Darwin wrote “the love for all living creatures is the most noble attribute of man”; it is clear that the narrator of one of the poems is much more noble than that of the narrator in the other poem. Not only do the narrators contrast each other in the two poems, the poems also differ in the theme, tone, and situation (Citr). The theme of the poem “Woodchucks” is no regard for the life of living creatures and death.
The arrangement of content allows the reader to establish similarities between the life of Krakauer and McCandless. In the book Into the Wild, the author uses a powerful writing
Victorious conquerors have taken prisoners of war in conflicts across human history. The foreign prison camps of the World Wars were infamous for their cruelty. However, many people are not aware that millions of German prisoners of war were placed in hundreds of camps all across America. These prisoners had their own unique experiences that differed significantly from prisoners held in foreign POW camps. Kurt Vonnegut voices his own traumatizing prisoner of war experience through the main character of Slaughterhouse-Five.
Throughout Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild, there are many details that help give the reader a deeper, more profound, meaning of the book 's intended purpose. Krakauer is one of the most renowned American writers, publishing many books specifically focused on nature, and people’s struggles with nature. Through much of the book, Krakauer incorporates many literary techniques, such as connotation, diction, ethos, pathos, logos, imagery, and syntax, to help each reader grasp the essence of the book. These aspects are utilized many times throughout each chapter in his book. By using a wide range of literary techniques, Krakauer is able to communicate the events that transpired during the book, in a way that pertains to each
Everything that happens has outward consequences on other people. In the short stories, “American History” by Judith Ortiz Cofer, “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut, and “The Scarlet Ibis” by James Hurst, the characters go through a lot of changes that affect the other characters in the story. The internal struggles of one character from each story have outward consequences because it pulls them apart from their families, helps them experience life, and reduces their capability of empathy. In “Harrison Bergeron”, Harrison is taken from his home at a young age because he was so different from everyone he knew as a kid including his parents.
The no-space trip: a mirror to our world Literature serves as a mirror to our world, when looking into it closely, it reflects even the most banal aspects of ourselves and the society we live in. Kurt Vonnegut 's Slaughterhouse Five serves as a mean of social criticism. For instance, the creation of Kilgore Trout and the different plots of his books criticize several aspects of society by the use of science fiction such as faith, economy and oil dependency. In chapter nine, Billy Pilgrim stops at a store which has several Trout books. As he reads them, the narrator introduces the resumed plot of each one.
In the novel Grendel by John Gardner, written in 1971, there are numerous concepts of the human nature portrayed and discussed. With the progression of the novel, the humans become develop to be described as increasingly careless, vicious and futile. Starting with Grendel 's first encounter with the humans to the death of the protagonist, Gardner illustrates an unusual view of the humans and their interactions with one another. Grendel begins as a creature similar to the people he observes, with many shared characteristics and thoughts, even though not all of the their actions are understood. His lasting wish is to be accepted into their society, as they accompany each other and he suffers of loneliness.
As for Breakfast of Champions, The New York Times describes it as Vonnegut preforming magic, “…he wheels out all the latest fashionable complaints about America--her racism, her gift for destroying language, her technological greed and selfishness--and makes them seem fresh, funny, outrageous, hateful, and lovable, all at the same time” (The New York Times, “Breakfast of Champions, Or Goodbye Blue Monday”). The plot is based on a science fiction writer, Kilgore Trout, who has “doodley-squat”, and a Pontiac dealer, Dwayne Hoover, who is “fabulously well-to-do”. We know that, in the future, the American Academy of Arts and Science will recognize Trout as a prodigious man for his writing. However, in the time period that the book is set in,
“The year was 2081, and everybody was finally equal”1 is a statement that in the mouth of the American writer should sound at least victorious. However, Kurt Vonnegut in the opening line of his dystopian short story Harrison Bergeron creates a highly ironical declaration, which he later ridicules by the following story. The author who gained his fame by writing the novel Slaughterhouse-Five, describes the world supposedly equal and free, but entirely bound by the laws that command the lives of people. That describes also fairly well the second short story 2 B R 0 2 B, which title refers to the famous phrase “to be or not to be”2 from William Shakespeare 's Hamlet, as mentioned in the text, “the trick telephone number that people who didn 't
Vonnegut tried to describe sex as human sexual urges to break us down piece by piece and make us feel less, mechanical, and routinized. He compares people to nothing more than a “fucking machine”. (Vonnegut) In the novel the narrator explains how Kilgore Trout’s work is filled for pornographic book and magazines. All his work is highlighted in public, which advertise “Wide Open Beavers Inside”.
Since the beginning of time humans have been inventing and enhancing technology. Over time technology has become very powerful. In the novel The Andromeda Strain, Michael Crichton 's career and life in the 1960s allowed him to develop the idea that the technology today has become so enhanced. Since the technology has become so advanced, when something goes wrong with it, we do not know what to do to fix it.
In Breakfast of Champions, Kurt Vonnegut develops his thesis regarding the power of ideas and what they can do to humans, mainly through the two main characters in the novel, Dwayne Hoover and Kilgore Trout. Dwayne Hoover is an unstable man. He is first introduced to the reader as being “fabulously well-to do,” and possessing “oodles of charm.” However, Hoover is afflicted by “bad chemicals,” in his mind. These bad chemicals, when working in tandem with bad ideas delivered by Trout, lead Dwayne to believe some radical beliefs regarding his fellow human beings.
Sometimes people forget that there are often many flaws in seemingly perfect things. They imagine perfection, but there will still be many factors that were overlooked. The author of “2BR02B”, Kurt Vonnegut, realizes that perfection will never be achieved. Even in the far future when there are many new, helpful innovations and perfection will be strived for, it is not obtainable. Through Vonnegut’s use of setting and symbolism, it is evident that he feels that there will always be flaws.
Every year “children” in America suffer hunger. To help out kids in America, Ikea has started donating. like Ikea many other companies with different programs have been set up to help kids. Many studies have shown that kids are often without food. So in order to help these kids have a better life, people could to volunteer by donating food to different programs.
CONCLUSION Kurt Vonnegut started his career as a novelist for more than twenty years and expressed his own view and experience throughout the novels. From the novels Player Piano and Breakfast of champions, Kurt Vonnegut has used his literary works to portray the problem of the individual and he struggles to deals with the confusing, and oftentimes terrifying, aspects of life in the modern worlds. Kurt Vonnegut’s basic concern in these two novels is based on the complexities of human situation.